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United States

EPA Limits Pollution From Chemical Plants (nytimes.com) 67

More than 200 chemical plants across the country will be required to curb the toxic pollutants they release into the air [non-paywalled link] under a regulation announced by the Biden administration on Tuesday. From a report: The regulation is aimed at reducing the risk of cancer for people living near industrial sites. This is the first time in nearly two decades that the government has tightened limits on pollution from chemical plants. The new rule, from the Environmental Protection Agency, specifically targets ethylene oxide, which is used to sterilize medical devices, and chloroprene, which is used to make rubber in footwear.

The E.P.A. has classified the two chemicals as likely carcinogens. They are considered a top health concern in an area of Louisiana so dense with petrochemical and refinery plants that it is known as Cancer Alley. Most of the facilities affected by the rule are in Texas, Louisiana and elsewhere along the Gulf Coast as well as in the Ohio River Valley and West Virginia. Communities in proximity to the plants are often disproportionately Black or Latino and have elevated rates of cancer, respiratory problems and premature deaths.

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EPA Limits Pollution From Chemical Plants

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  • Why allow -any- pollution instead of arguing over how much is ok?

    • because forbidding all pollution is no different from just shutting down every chemical plant. Forbidding specific pollutants shuts down all processes which make them. And I, for one, kind of like having headphones under $150 each, cars under $200,000, and food for 10% to 50% the price it would have to be if packaged in wood, glass, and a limited range of paper or cardboard. I also like having a computer, using dish soap, and many, many other activities which rely on these toxin-producing chemical plants.
    • Because cratering the economy by forbidding transportation and manufacturing is generally seen as a terrible idea.

  • by Petersko ( 564140 ) on Tuesday April 09, 2024 @12:05PM (#64381142)

    Choose your adjectives:

    "Anti-business"
    "Anti-freedom"
    "Government interference" ... and many more

    The very last thing on the priority list of the powers involved is the cancer risk of people in surrounding areas. It doesn't even register in their mental top ten. And While I think the landscape is more complicated than simple reductionism supports, there is one side of the political spectrum that is far less caring about the health of citizens, and far more willing to bend to the interests of industrial lobbyists.

    And the cynic in me says that the proposers of this legislation know this perfectly well, and do not expect it to stand for long. And so it's nothing but a political talking point to be used in the fall. The whole lot of them should be put in a bag and beaten with sticks. (Apologies to Dara O'Briain )

  • i mean anecdotally they cause brain cancer, and brain cancer is bad
    • So does wine, coffee, the sun, grains, plants, meat, veganism and all those things reduce cancer too. In other words we donâ(TM)t really know what causes cancer.

Heisengberg might have been here.

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